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Mississippi Democratic primary for governor will again be uncontested

Andreachhio parents can t sue uncle of girlfriend and assistant AG over records of son s death

JACKSON, Miss. (Legal Newsline) - The parents of a young man whose death drew national attention including podcasts and a $47 million defamation suit can’t sue the man who obtained investigative records from the state before they did and published them on his personal website, the Mississippi Supreme Court ruled.

Mississippi Supreme Court affirms $4M wrongful death verdict over birth of child

JACKSON, Miss. (Legal Newsline) – A Mississippi cap on non-economic damages doesn’t apply to a $4 million jury verdict in a wrongful death lawsuit even though it was filed after the cap took effect.

Mississippi medical marijuana hangs in balance with Supreme Court

By Geoff Pender Apr 14, 2021 3:28 PM The medical marijuana program Mississippi voters approved in November, set to begin in August, hangs in the balance with the state Supreme Court, which heard oral arguments about Initiative 65 on Wednesday. The arguments have nothing to do with medical marijuana or the program voters enshrined in the state constitution, but on procedural issues whether Initiative 65’s placement on the ballot through a signature petition was constitutionally proper. Chief Justice Michael Randolph indicated the nine-judge court would issue an opinion as quickly as possible and, “I know many people are waiting on this.” “It’s in the judges’ hands now,” said Madison Mayor Mary Hawkins Butler, who filed a Supreme Court challenge to Initiative 65 just days before voters approved it on Nov. 3. “This is one of those defining moments for our state. Maybe we can take care of other antiquated laws that are hindering our progress and our growth.

State statute governing election appeals being challenged on constitutional grounds

State statute governing election appeals being challenged on constitutional grounds (Source: Pexels) By Anthony Warren | January 18, 2021 at 12:02 PM CST - Updated January 18 at 1:17 PM JACKSON, Miss. (WLBT) - A former Hinds County supervisor’s efforts to overturn the 2019 Democratic primary results on the grounds of residency could lead to a state election law being changed. Darrel McQuirter is challenging District Two Supervisor David Archie in court, saying Archie shouldn’t have been able to run for supervisor based on residency requirements. He is currently seeking a rehearing in his case before the Mississippi Supreme Court. Meanwhile, Sam Begley, an attorney for McQuirter, has notified the state attorney general that he is challenging the constitutionality of a state code governing election appeals.

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